Yu-Gi-Oh! Forbidden Memories

released on Dec 09, 1999

Yu-Gi-Oh! Forbidden Memories was developed by Konami Computer Entertainment Japan and published by Konami for the PlayStation. It was released in Japan on December 9, 1999, in North America on March 20, 2002, and in Europe on November 22, 2002. The players play the Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game alongside characters that appear in the series.


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Joguinho maldito de roubado, gastei muitas horas farmando a porcaria das cartas que demoravam pra krl pra vir porém era muito satisfatório quando conseguíamos passar dos high mages e ganhar o último duelo.

Simply the best Yu Gi Oh ever made (laughs). I know that's not the case, as nowadays we have several others that surpass it, especially if we take the rules into account. However, no other Yu Gi Oh game entertained me as much as this one. I remember finishing with my friend and it was a magical moment. Forbidden Memories is stored in the heart

Jogo muito bom, ganha pontos e perde ao mesmo tempo por ser tão impossível de entender o que tava rolando ainda mais quando criança.

sumamente injusto y dependes mucho de la suerte para avanzar, tambien el farmeo de cartas que se tiene que hacer es demasiado
ya sea porque no te sale la carta que queres o porque la carta con el codigo cuesta muchas estrellas
mejor jugar tag force 1 el mejor videojuegpo de yugioh

Yu-Gi-Oh's early games are interesting to go back to because, unlike basically every other card game I can think of (even ones that went through major publisher changes like WoWTCG's transition to Cryptozoic or the Pokemon TCG away from WOTC), there was a period of time where the rules of the game didn't really exist. The first Yugi major was played through Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters for the Gameboy, for example. What we know as Yugi wouldn't solidify until Konami's OCG ruleset in 2002, which would be exported around the world (banlist changes aside). As a historical artifact of a card game property without a card game (no, the Bandai version doesn't count), this is a really cool video game to have access to, especially stateside.

This game still sucks to play through, though. I wish it didn't. Even as a condensed version of the card game, with the core rules the game has, I think there's some fun to be had with contact fusions and deck building. If you enjoy breaking out the SMT fusion chart, this is the card game for you. The balance of the game is horrendous, with decks and board states that cheat and that the player cannot consistently overcome, even with proper deckbuilding. You're going to lose a lot, and being a PS1 game, getting into another match takes an unreasonable amount of time. I would have rather the game been way too easy, but let the target audience for this game play around in a sandbox full of cards and effects that would only apply to this weird, at the time 3 year old import title than have the game in its current state. It's not like the game can be beaten in an afternoon as is! There's a good amount of fights and over 700 cards to choose from.

If you want to give this a go, there is an active modding scene with tweaks to the gameplay on either end. As a stand alone title, it's hard to recommend playing through the entire thing.

Unbalanced and grindy as fck